The U.S. had participated in the formulations of the
Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 which banned chemical warfare, among other things, but the U.S. never joined the article which prohibited chemical weapons.
World War I In
World War I, the U.S. established its own chemical weapons research facility and produced its own chemical munitions. It produced 5,770 metric tons of these weapons, including 1,400 metric tons of
phosgene and 175 metric tons of
mustard gas. This was about 4% of the total chemical weapons produced for that war and only just over 1% of the era's most effective weapon, mustard gas. (U.S. troops suffered less than 6% of gas casualties.) The United States began large-scale production of an improved
vesicant gas known as
Lewisite, for use in an offensive planned for early 1919. Lewisite was a major American contribution to the chemical weapon arsenal of World War I, although it was not actually used in the field during World War I. It was developed by
Captain Winford Lee Lewis of the U.S.
Chemical Warfare Service in 1917. (The Germans later claimed that they had manufactured it in 1917 prior to the American discovery.) By the time of the
armistice on 11 November 1918, a plant near
Willoughby, Ohio, was producing 10 tons per day of the substance, for a total of about 150 tons. After the war, the U.S. was party to the
Washington Arms Conference Treaty of 1922 which would have banned chemical weapons but failed because it was rejected by France. The U.S. continued to
stockpile chemical weapons, eventually exceeding 30,000 tons of material.
World War II explodes and a portable
flamethrower can be seen during a demonstration at
Edgewood Arsenal, 1943. Chemical weapons were not used by the U.S. or the other
Allies during
World War II; however, quantities of such weapons were deployed to Europe for use in case Germany initiated chemical warfare. At least one accident occurred: On the night of December 2, 1943, German
Junkers Ju 88 bombers
attacked the port of Bari in Southern
Italy, sinking several American ships – among them
John Harvey, which was carrying mustard gas. The presence of the gas was highly classified, and authorities ashore had no knowledge of it – which increased the number of fatalities, since physicians, who had no idea that they were dealing with the effects of mustard gas, prescribed treatment not consistent with those suffering from exposure and immersion. According to the U.S. military account, "Sixty-nine deaths were attributed in whole or in part to the mustard gas, most of them American merchant seamen" out of 628 mustard gas military casualties. Civilian casualties were not recorded. The whole affair was kept secret at the time and for many years after the war. Large quantities of chemical weapons were also deployed to India, from where they could have been delivered to Japan by B-29 bombers. At the end of the war, over 50,000 mustard gas bombs, 10,000 phosgene bombs and other chemical munitions were dumped into deep water in the Bay of Bengal. The US military conducted experiments with chemical weapons like lewisite and mustard gas on Japanese American, Puerto Rican and African Americans in the US military in World War II to see how non-white races would react to being mustard gassed, with Rollin Edwards describing it as "It felt like you were on fire, Guys started screaming and hollering and trying to break out. And then some of the guys fainted. And finally they opened the door and let us out, and the guys were just, they were in bad shape." and "It took all the skin off your hands. Your hands just rotted". White soldiers were used as "normal" control group.
Operation Downfall Operation Downfall was the unrealized Allied plan for a mid-1945 invasion of the main Japanese islands of
Kyushu and
Honshu. The U.S. military considered the use of chemical weapons by themselves and Japanese forces. warhead cutaway, showing
M134 Sarin bomblets (photo c. 1960) , used to deliver
sarin or
VX nerve agents.
Cold War After the war, the Allies recovered German artillery shells containing three new
nerve agents developed by the Germans (
Tabun,
Sarin, and
Soman), prompting further research into nerve agents by all of the former Allies. Thousands of American soldiers were exposed to chemical warfare agents during
Cold War testing programs (see
Edgewood Arsenal human experiments), as well as in accidents. In 1968,
one such accident killed approximately 6,400 sheep when an agent drifted out of
Dugway Proving Ground during a test. The North Koreans and Chinese have alleged that chemical and
biological weapons were used by the United States in the
Korean War; but the United States' denial is supported by Russian archival documents. The U.S. also investigated a wide range of possible nonlethal,
psychobehavioral chemical incapacitating agents including
psychedelic indoles such as
lysergic acid diethylamide (also experimenting to see if it could be used for effective
mind control) and
marijuana derivatives, certain tranquilizers like
ketamine or
fentanyl, as well as several glycolate anticholinergics. One of the anticholinergic compounds,
3-quinuclidinyl benzilate, was assigned the
NATO code BZ and was weaponized at the beginning of the 1960s for possible battlefield use. This agent was allegedly employed by American troops as a counterinsurgency weapon in the
Vietnam War but the U.S. maintains that this agent never saw operational use. Chinese historians allege extensive U.S. use of BZ. The U.S. was alleged to have used sarin in Laos during
Operation Tailwind, against North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao forces, and potentially American defectors. The growing protests over the U.S. role in the Vietnam War, the use of
defoliants there, and the use of
riot control agents both in
Southeast Asia and inside the U.S. (as well as heightened concern for the environment) all gradually increased public hostility in the U.S. toward chemical weapons in the 1960s. Three events particularly galvanized public attention: a
1968 sheep-kill incident at Dugway Proving Ground,
Operation Cut Holes and Sink ‘Em (CHASE) — a program involving disposal of unwanted munitions at sea — and a 1969 accident with sarin at Okinawa.
Renunciation of first use On November 25, 1969, President
Richard Nixon unilaterally
renounced the first use of chemical weapons and renounced all methods of biological warfare. He issued a unilateral decree halting production and transport of chemical weapons which remains in effect. From 1967 to 1970 in
Operation CHASE, the U.S. disposed of chemical weapons by sinking ships laden with the weapons in the deep
Atlantic. The U.S. began to research safer disposal methods for chemical weapons in the 1970s, destroying several thousand tons of mustard gas by incineration at
Rocky Mountain Arsenal and nearly 4,200 tons of nerve agent by chemical neutralization at
Tooele Army Depot and Rocky Mountain Arsenal. The U.S. entered the
Geneva Protocol in 1975 at the same time it ratified the Biological Weapons Convention. This was the first operative international treaty on chemical weapons that the United States was party to. In May 1991, President
George H. W. Bush unilaterally committed the United States to destroying all chemical weapons and renounced the right to chemical weapon retaliation. In 1993, the United States signed the Chemical Weapons Convention, which required the destruction of all chemical weapon agents, dispersal systems, and chemical weapons production facilities by April 2012. In 1997, the United States formally agreed to destroy its stockpile by ratifying the Chemical Weapons Convention. The international
treaty bans the use of all chemical weapons and aims to eliminate them throughout the world. during "Operation Steel Box" (aka "Operation Golden Python"). This 1990 joint U.S.-West German operation moved 100,000 U.S. chemical weapons from Germany to
Johnston Atoll.
Decommissioning and destruction The U.S. began stockpile reductions in the 1980s, removing some outdated munitions and destroying its entire stock of BZ beginning in 1988. In June 1990,
Johnston Atoll Chemical Agent Disposal System began destruction of chemical agents stored on
Johnston Atoll in the
Pacific, seven years before the
Chemical Weapons Convention came into effect. In 1990, 1,197 tons of sarin, 383 tons of VX, and 262 metric tons of mustard gas were stored at Johnston Atoll. In 1986, President
Ronald Reagan made an agreement with Chancellor
Helmut Kohl to remove the U.S. stockpile of chemical weapons from Germany. As part of
Operation Steel Box, in July 1990, two ships were loaded with over 100,000 shells containing
GB and
VX taken from U.S. Army weapons storage depots such as Miesau and then-classified ammunition FSTS (forward storage/transportation sites) and transported from
Bremerhaven, Germany, to Johnston Atoll in the Pacific, a 46-day nonstop journey. U.S. chemical weapons had previously moved to Johnston Atoll from Okinawa in 1971 under
Operation Red Hat. The U.S. prohibition on the transport of chemical weapons as part of the Chemical Weapons Convention meant that destruction facilities had to be constructed at each of the U.S. nine storage facilities. By 1993, the U.S. Army's
Chemical Corps had transitioned to
CBRN defense, and the employment of smoke, obscurant, and flame capabilities. Beginning in 1999, ACWA was tasked by the
Secretary of Defense to demonstrate six incineration alternatives to destroy the remaining U.S. chemical weapons stockpile stored at the
Blue Grass Army Depot in Kentucky and the
U.S. Army Pueblo Chemical Depot in Colorado, the final two stockpiles in the United States. By 2000, ACWA had demonstrated six technologies.
Neutralization followed by
biotreatment was selected for the Colorado stockpile, and neutralization followed by
supercritical water oxidation was selected for the Kentucky stockpile. The U.S. met the first three of the treaty's four deadlines, destroying 45% of its stockpile of chemical weapons by 2007. By January 2012, the final treaty deadline, the United States had destroyed 89.75% of the original stockpile. Only the stockpiles in Kentucky and Colorado remained. The final chemical weapon was not destroyed until July 7, 2023. The chemical weapons destroyed, declared in 1997, included over 30,000 tons of chemical agents stored within almost 3.5 million munitions, and well over 22,500 tons of agents in other containers. ==Treaties==